Fix one such THING in code to match comment.
Sort IO_GSC* into numeric order and update comments about the gaps.
Sort common SCSI addresses into alphabetical order.
Remove bogus comments about com ports having i/o size 4.
Uniformize whitespace.
Uniformize case in hex digits.
This file is very incomplete. In particular, it doesn't mention any
network cards. This doesn't matter much for the base addresses, but
it means that the comments about which addresses are free are mostly
bogus. The i/o sizes are unreliable because of split address ranges
for many devices (VGA, wd). The i/o sizes are incomplete. In
particular, there are no sizes for SCSI controllers. The bt driver
still returns a truth value instead of a size.
- the major number wasn't checked, so accesses beyond the end of bdevsw[]
were possible. Bogus major numbers are easy to get because `sysctl -w'
doesn't handle dev_t's reasonably - it doesn't convert names to dev_t's
and it converts the number 1025 to the dev_t 0x35323031.
- Driver d_psize() functions return -1 to indicate error ENXIO or ENODEV
(the interface is too braindamaged to say which). -1 was interpreted
as a size and resulted in the bogus error ENOSPC.
- it was possible to set the dumpdev for devices without a d_psize()
function. This is equivalent to setting the dumpdev to NODEV except
it confuses sysctl.
- change a 512 to DEV_BSIZE. There is an official macro dtoc() for
converting "pages" to disk blocks but it is never used in /usr/src/sys.
There is much confusion between PAGE_SIZE sized pages and NBPG sized
pages. Maxmem consists of both.
Not fixed:
- there is nothing to invalidate the dumpdev if the media goes away.
This reduces the benefits of the early calculation of dumplo. Bounds
checking in the dump routines is relied on to reduce the risk of
damage and little would be lost by relying on the dump routines to
calculate dumplo.
- no attempt is made to stay away from the start of the device to
avoid clobbering labels.
Fix wrong && anachronistic comment about the type of bootdev.
Reviewed by: davidg
Submitted by: Bruce Evans
LINT talks about about 2.1. I changed that to 2.0.5,
and clarified why certain devices need "at scbus?".
There is still a crazy "PCVT=210" which shouldn't be there,
but corrected comment as it is needed for 2.0.5.
- option DODUMP no longer exists (remove all references to it).
- directive `swap on' is now a no-op (don't bother documenting it; remove
comment to match code).
- directive `dumps on' still works (restore code to match comment; deprecate
it in comment).
Reviewed by: Poul-Henning Kamp, and me
Submitted by: Bruce Evans
in machdep.c (it should use the global nmbclusters). Moved the calculation
of nmbclusters into conf/param.c (same place where nmbclusters has always
been assigned), and made the calculation include an extra amount based
on "maxusers". NMBCLUSTERS can still be overrided in the kernel config
file as always, but this change will make that generally unnecessary. This
fixes the "bug" reports from people who have misconfigured kernels seeing
the network hang when the mbuf cluster pool runs out.
Reviewed by: John Dyson
the National Semiconductor InfoMover PCMCIA cards also. In tests on a
NE4100 on Jordan's laptop here, the ze driver works fine with that
card.
Reviewed by: Jordan Hubbard, Rod Grimes, and me
Submitted by: Gary Palmer
serial_putchar() always hung if it was called and the serial port existed,
so booting with -h hung when the above bug was fixed. Previously, setting
-h did nothing but -h was sometimes the default due to the stack garbage
bug.
Submitted by: DI. Christian Gusenbauer <cg@scotty.edvz.uni-linz.ac.at>
The `howto' arg to boot() was not supplied, so it was stack garbage (actually
the return address in the boot program). I didn't use the submitted fix.
1) If a target initiated a sync negotiation with us and happened to chose a
value above 15, the old code inadvertantly truncated it with an "& 0x0f".
If the periferal picked something really bad like 0x32, you'd end up with
an offset of 2 which would hang the drive since it didn't expect to ever
get something so low. We now do a MIN(maxoffset, given_offset).
2) In the case of Wide cards, we were turning on sync transfers after a
sucessfull wide negotiation. Now we leave the offset alone in the per
target scratch space (which implies asyncronous transfers since we initialize
it that way) until a syncronous negotation occurs.
3) We were advertizing a max offset of 15 instead of 8 for wide devices.
4) If the upper level SCSI code sent down a "SCSI_RESET", it would hang the
system because we would end up sending a null command to the sequencer. Now
we handle SCSI_RESET correctly by having the sequencer interrupt us when it
is about to fill the message buffer so that we can fill it in ourselves.
The sequencer will also "simulate" a command complete for these "message only"
SCBs so that the kernel driver can finish up properly. The cdplay utility
will send a "SCSI_REST" to the cdplayer if you use the reset command.
5) The code that handles SCSIINTs was broken in that if more than one type
of error was true at once, we'd do outbs without the card being paused.
The else clause after the busfree case was also an accident waiting to
happen. I've now turned this into an if, else if, else type of thing, since
in most cases when we handle one type of error, it should be okay to ignore
the rest (ie if we have a SELTO, who cares if there was a parity error on
the transaction?), but the section should really be rewritten after 2.0.5.
This fix was the least obtrusive way to patch the problem.
6) Only tag either SDTR or WDTR negotiation on an SCB. The real problem is
that I don't account for the case when an SCB that is tagged to do a particular
type of negotiation completes or SELTOs (selection timeout) without the
negotiation taking place, so the accounting of sdtrpending and wdtrpending
gets screwed up. In the wide case, if we tag it to do both wdtr and sdtr,
it only performs wdtr (since wdtr must occur first and we spread out the
negotiation over two commands) so we always have sdtrpending set for that
target and we never do a real SDTR. I fill properly fix the accounting
after 2.0.5 goes out the door, but this works (as confirmed by Dan) on
wide targets.
Other stuff that is also included:
1) Don't do a bzero when recycling SCBs. The only thing that must explicitly
be set to zero is the scb control byte which is done in ahc_get_scb. We also
need to set the SG_list_pointer and SG_list_count to 0 for commands that do
not transfer data.
2) Mask the interrupt type printout for the aic7870 case. The bit we were
using to determine interrupt type is only valid for the aic7770.
Submitted by: Justin Gibbs
the 802.3 frames generated by the DC21040 (which does automatic padding
of less-than-minimum frames) and the frames generated by the 'ed'
driver, I've found that there is indeed a bug in the size of "ETHER_MIN_LEN"
as reported by several people, John Hay being the most recent. The driver
was actually setting the length to 6+6+2+50 (64 bytes), which when adding
in the CRC (which is automatically appended to the frame and not included
in the length), the minimum frame is 4 bytes larger than it is supposed to
be. All of this is confirmed by tcpdump showing 50 bytes of data for
minimum frames from the 'ed' cards and 46 bytes from 'de' cards. This
analysis has also revealed that there is garbage in the un-filled in
portion at the end of the minimum frames from the 'ed' driver; I don't
plan to fix this.
require specific partitions be mentioned in the kernel config
file ("swap on foo" is now obsolete).
From Poul-Henning:
The visible effect is this:
As default, unless
options "NSWAPDEV=23"
is in your config, you will have four swap-devices.
You can swapon(2) any block device you feel like, it doesn't have
to be in the kernel config.
There is a performance/resource win available by getting the NSWAPDEV right
(but only if you have just one swap-device ??), but using that as default
would be too restrictive.
The invisible effect is that:
Swap-handling disappears from the $arch part of the kernel.
It gets a lot simpler (-145 lines) and cleaner.
Reviewed by: John Dyson, David Greenman
Submitted by: Poul-Henning Kamp, with minor changes by me.
A phone call from Manfred quickly pointed up the fact that I got the conflict
check backwards. NOW we implement the conflict checking correctly! Wheesh!
- Do the right thing when booting in NFS diskless mode, which is nothing.
Make the default unconfigured entries for swdevt[0] and dumplo something
that swapconf() will ignore and not choke on (the swap setup is done
in nfs_vfsops.c when booting diskless).
to access it. setdelayed() actually ORs the bits in `idelayed' into
`ipending' and clears `idelayed'.
Call setdelayed() every (normal) clock tick to convert delayed
interrupts into pending ones.
Drivers can set bits in `idelayed' at any time to schedule an interrupt
at the next clock tick. This is more efficient than calling timeout().
Currently only software interrupts can be scheduled.
boot diskless with it, you get a panic because setconf() is only
called for mountroot == ffs_mountroot. It really needs to be called
no matter what manner of rootfs we have. I can't really say if
swapgeneric will work with a CD-ROM though. (I get the feeling I'm
the only one who uses swapgeneric these days anyway.)
there may even be LKMs.) Also, change the internal name of `unixdomain'
to `localdomain' since AF_LOCAL is now the preferred name of this family.
Declare netisr correctly and in the right place.